![]() On the plus side, it felt more intuitive to put together a basic Rails app than in the other IDEs I've tried so far. There were a few rough edges (project file list didn't always update with new files quickly some minor interface snafus had to add db:migrate Rake task manually) and there's the downside that it takes several minutes to start your first project as it wants to scour through all of your Ruby libraries. I don't have any personal experience with IntellIJ so you'll need to make your own mind up, but in casual testing RubyMine worked well. When I posted about the preview of RubyMine five months ago, several people raved about how great they thought JetBrains' IntellIJ IDEA IDE was (which RubyMine is built upon). ![]() You can download it right away - it came in at about a 75MB download for OS X, but Windows and Linux versions are also available. ![]() Now, they've released the beta of version 1.0, the precursor for a final 1.0 launch later this month. Five months ago JetBrains (the company behind Java IDE IntellJ IDEA) released a "public preview" of RubyMine, a new Ruby and Rails IDE.
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